154 THE ORCHID REVIEW. [May, 1908. 
volume) is remarkable for its perfect shape and clear white ground colour, 
with a few blotches on the sepals and petals only. But we must leave this 
charming collection, which formed one of the great centres of attraction to 
visitors. 
M. A. A. Peeters, Brussels, was awarded an CZuvre d’Art for a small 
group of new and rare Odontoglossums, including O. xX _ Fascinator, 
Souvenir du Centenaire, a fine, densely-blotched variety, with three 
other charming forms of the same hybrid, O. crispum Bijou d’Uccle, a 
beautiful white form, with a group of crimson-brown blotches in the centre, 
forming a zone, the beautifully-blotched O. c. Madouxianum, O. X 
ardentissimum Cooksonianum and O. a. Evansianum, two superbly blotched 
forms, &c. 
A Gold Medal was awarded to M. Noel Bernard, of the University of 
Caen, for botanical appliances, including a series of photographs, prepara- 
tions and specimens illustrating symbiosis between Orchid roots and 
fungi, our report on which must be deferred till next month. 
A Gold Medal was given to M. Th. Pauwels, Meirelbeke, for his beautiful 
group of Cattleya Lawrenceana. 
A Gold Medal was given to M. de Bievre, gardener to His Majesty, 
King Leopold, for a remarkably fine specimen of Cattleya Lawrenceana, 
bearing eighteen racemes. 
A Silver-gilt Medal was given to M. Emile Praet, Mont-St.-Amand, for 
a beautiful group of Cattleya Schreedere. 
A Silver-gilt Medal was given to the Gardener’s Chronicle, London, for 2 
fine series of engravings, including many Orchids. 
A Silver Medal was given to M. Van de Putte, Ledeberg, for a fine 
group of Lycaste Skinneri. 
Messrs. Charlesworth & Co., Bradford, England, staged a choice little 
group, containing the beautiful Odontioda Vuylstekeze Albion, O. Brad- 
shawie, O. keighleyense, a fine Miltonia x Bleuana, a very distinct form 
of Vanda lamellata, Odontoglossum crispum Princess of Wales, O. sceptrum 
aureum, and O. X armainvillierense var. Ebor, a very heavily blotched 
form. 
Messrs. Hugh Low & Co., Enfield, England, sent a few plants of 
Cattleya Mendelii, and a few cut Orchids. 
We also noticed an illustration showing the remarkable effect of the 
fusion of three flowers of Cattleya Loddigesii into one, there being three 
columns, three lips, and eleven sepals and petals, but we omitted to note the 
exhibitor. 
It was remarked, as showing the tendency of modern Orchid culture, 
that all the novelties were among hybrids, and the only species to which 
the term ‘‘ new”’ fairly applies, was Dendrobium Bronckartii. 
